We're aware that some users are experiencing technical issues which the team are working to resolve. See the Community Noticeboard for more info. Thank you for your patience.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

Multiple LISAs and home deposit

Options
Hello everyone,
I've been reading that as with normal ISAs, we can open multiple LISA, one per year.
So let's assume the following scenario:
year 1 - LISA1: savings £4000 + bonus £1000
year 2 - LISA1: savings £9000 (year 1 savings and bonus + additional £4000) + bonus £1000
LISA2: savings £4000 + bonus £1000
year 3 - I wan to buy a house as first-time buyer. Can I use the money from both the LISAs towards the home deposit? Would I still have the bonus for both the LISAs or the bonus will be lost for one of them?

Thanks in advance for your replies, I tried to google this type of scenario but I couldn't find anything.

Comments

  • masonic
    masonic Posts: 27,181 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    Any reason why you would not consolidate all of the funds into one LISA prior to making the penalty free withdrawal?
  • That's the point of my question. I'm trying to understand what are the possible options that I have. What you said is something that I haven't considered at all. So is it possible to merge two LISAs together at some point in time?
  • badger09
    badger09 Posts: 11,575 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    alibraton wrote: »
    Hello everyone,
    I've been reading that as with normal ISAs, we can open multiple LISA, one per year.
    So let's assume the following scenario:
    year 1 - LISA1: savings £4000 + bonus £1000
    year 2 - LISA1: savings £9000 (year 1 savings and bonus + additional £4000) + bonus £1000
    LISA2: savings £4000 + bonus £1000
    year 3 - I wan to buy a house as first-time buyer. Can I use the money from both the LISAs towards the home deposit? Would I still have the bonus for both the LISAs or the bonus will be lost for one of them?

    Thanks in advance for your replies, I tried to google this type of scenario but I couldn't find anything.

    I may be misreading your question, but in year 2 above, it looks as though you are paying £4000 into LISA 1, and another £4000 into LISA 2.

    That is not possible. You can pay a maximum of £4000 per tax year into your LISA

    So, in year 2 you could either pay £4000 into LISA 1, or open another LISA and pay £4000 into that. But you can't do both.
  • badger09 wrote: »
    I may be misreading your question, but in year 2 above, it looks as though you are paying £4000 into LISA 1, and another £4000 into LISA 2.

    That is not possible. You can pay a maximum of £4000 per tax year into your LISA

    So, in year 2 you could either pay £4000 into LISA 1, or open another LISA and pay £4000 into that. But you can't do both.

    Hi badger09,
    you didn't misread. That is actually another point that I want to understand better.
    So, based on what you said, I can't pay more than £4000 per year in total and not per LISA per year. Am I right?
  • badger09
    badger09 Posts: 11,575 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper
    alibraton wrote: »
    Hi badger09,
    you didn't misread. That is actually another point that I want to understand better.
    So, based on what you said, I can't pay more than £4000 per year in total and not per LISA per year. Am I right?

    Correct.

    Maximum you can pay in, in any tax year is £4k.

    The other rule is that all current year LISA subscriptions (new money paid in, same rule applies to other types of ISA) must be kept together. So, if you start paying into LISA 1 and then in same tax year see a better rate/more attractive one elsewhere, you must fist ask new LISA provider to xfer LISA1 for you and once transfer complete, you can pay more into that one, subject to £4k max of course.

    You can split previous years' subscriptions however you want to.
  • badger09 wrote: »
    Correct.

    Maximum you can pay in, in any tax year is £4k.

    The other rule is that all current year LISA subscriptions (new money paid in, same rule applies to other types of ISA) must be kept together. So, if you start paying into LISA 1 and then in same tax year see a better rate/more attractive one elsewhere, you must fist ask new LISA provider to xfer LISA1 for you and once transfer complete, you can pay more into that one, subject to £4k max of course.

    You can split previous years' subscriptions however you want to.

    This has clarified all my doubts! Thank you.
  • masonic
    masonic Posts: 27,181 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    alibraton wrote: »
    That's the point of my question. I'm trying to understand what are the possible options that I have. What you said is something that I haven't considered at all. So is it possible to merge two LISAs together at some point in time?
    Yes, you can transfer one into the other, not all LISAs accept transfers from other providers, but all cash LISAs do at this time (I believe). I can't think of a good reason for holding two LISAs if you are planning to use all the money towards a house purchase in the short term - unless a LISA appears with a favourable rate for 'new money' only, which hasn't happened yet.
  • Alexland
    Alexland Posts: 10,183 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Seventh Anniversary Photogenic Name Dropper
    Yes if saving in Cash LISAs there is currently no reason to have multiple accounts (as you can only contribute new money into one LISA per tax year) so you just keep moving the LISA between providers to get the best rates. The current best buy Moneybox accepts transfers-in of old LISAs.

    https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/savings/lifetime-isas/

    https://www.moneyboxapp.com/cash-lifetime-isa/
  • masonic wrote: »
    Yes, you can transfer one into the other, not all LISAs accept transfers from other providers, but all cash LISAs do at this time (I believe). I can't think of a good reason for holding two LISAs if you are planning to use all the money towards a house purchase in the short term - unless a LISA appears with a favourable rate for 'new money' only, which hasn't happened yet.

    Yes you're right. The thing is that I wasn't aware that you can pay only in 1 LISA per year. So my point was if I pay in 2 LISAs, I get the bonus twice, but then can use both for an home deposit? But since with the previous replies I got that you can't pay in more than 1 LISA per year, my original thought is not valid anymore.
This discussion has been closed.
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 350.9K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253.1K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453.5K Spending & Discounts
  • 243.9K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 598.8K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 176.9K Life & Family
  • 257.2K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.